Football: Arsenal vs Borussia Dortmund7.30pm, ITV1

It was given the "…Of Death" mantle by the press, but so far Arsenal have found their Champions League group relatively straightforward, with Marseille and Napoli both overwhelmed by the attacking verve of Arsène Wenger's side. Last season's runners-up, Borussia Dortmund, have had a patchy campaign so far, with a defeat in Naples in their opening group game, but on form should offer the Gunners a genuine test of their European Cup credentials. Gwilym Mumford

The Great British Bake Off – The Final8pm, BBC2

The final of this year's competition has the remaining three flour warriors crouching tearfully by their ovens for the last time, watching their doughy hopes rise or fall at the will of that capricious fast-action yeast. Ruby has been hated for her beauty and Frances has been a show-off with her architecture, but both have managed to reach the final, along with Kimberley the psychologist. Which of the remaining trio has what it takes to wow Berry and Hollywood and claim the trophy? Julia Raeside

Masters Of Sex9pm, Channel 4

Where's the best place to research? Not in a brothel, William Masters and Virginia Johnson discover, as the rumpy-pumpy environment where they've been forced to set up shop produces misleading data. But how to get the study accepted back at the hospital? Meantime, there's a new female doctor in the department of obstetrics and gynaecology, Haas treats a patient expecting quadruplets, and Libby struggles to conceive. A drama that, for all its titillating subject matter, is revealing its charms gradually. Jonathan Wright

CSI: New York9pm, Channel 5

Having now gone the same sorry way as CSI: Miami, CSI: New York concludes with its final two episodes this week, meaning you'll have to go elsewhere for all future Gary Sinise requirements. The penultimate instalment, Blood Actually, finds three separate homicides on Valentine's Day, while the very last hurrah, Today Is Life, gets political when an officer shoots an unarmed black man following a jewellery store robbery. A riot threatens to break out, with Mac and Flack trapped inside the precinct. Ben Arnold

The Central Park Five9pm, PBS

Ken Burns co-made this blood-boiling documentary with daughter Sarah about five African-American boys convicted of the rape and attempted murder of a jogger in Central Park in 1989. It becomes clear, however, that their conviction was secured in a citywide mood of vindictive paranoia and racist antipathy, stirred by the media and over-zealously pursued by police and prosecutors. We see how, despite glaring evidence to the contrary, those who got it wrong are to this day in denial about their own guilt. Concludes Wednesday. David Stubbs

Elementary9pm, Sky Living

Return of the US Sherlock Holmes drama that just happened to come out around the same time as the far superior BBC reboot. Jonny Lee Miller and Lucy Liu are back as Holmes and Watson, and tonight it's a Natural Nylon reunion as they travel to London to see Lestrade (Sean Pertwee). It's not long before they also bump into Mycroft (Rhys Ifans) who now lives at 221b Baker Street. What next? Sadie Frost as Mrs Hudson? It's all about brotherly bonding and getting Lestrade out of a hole tonight. Fun as always. JNR

London Irish10.10pm, Channel 4

This portrayal of hard-living Irish friends in London has done nothing to dispel stereotypes about the drinking habits of Emerald Isle expats, and this penultimate episode offers more of the same. Post-St Patrick's Day, the friends find themselves hungover with no idea where they are. Packy (Peter Campion) is in pain; the menacing Aoife keeps calling him and there's an old woman lying unconscious nearby. Niamh finds a clue in the form of a photo of the gang along with Aoife … and Riverdance legend Michael Flatley. Racy, insalubrious fun. Hannah J Davies

Fox Wars10.35pm, BBC1

Everyone's fighting their own battle and, it seems, many are also fighting a full-blown war in their own back garden. This documentary meets those pitting their wits against the foxes terrorising lawns and urban chicken coops, along with country folk driven to despair by decapitated farm animals. In the countryside, the solution is normally a bullet, but there are humane alternatives, such as Foxagon, run by sensitive souls Terry and Graham, who carefully evict foxes from gardens and rehabilitate abandoned or diseased animals. Rachel Aroesti